This was the advice from the very popular beer guy at Dunedin Stadium where we witnessed the Blue Jays host the Tigers Sunday afternoon. As it turned out, it was a wise move to blow off the three-hour trip to see the Yankees embarrassed by the Twins in Ft. Myers. It was on this day in 1857 that baseball decided that a game would constitute nine innings, not nine runs. Reverse that rule and two of the last three Yankee losses would have ended early.

Catching Johnny Damon in the on-deck circle with Ajax at bat was what we had hoped for.
It was a very entertaining game, as the visiting Bengals immediately jumped on Brian Tallet for two home runs and three runs, making the numerous Tigers fans in attendance very happy. Jackson worked the Blue Jays lefthander for five pitches, then singled to left. Damon flied to center as we waited to see Jackson take off for second, but he ended up trotting around to home when Magglio Ordonez hit a first-pitch bomb to left that was not visible when it came down because it cleared some very tall trees 50 or so feet beyond the fence, some 30 feet further distant at that point than the measured 333 feet right at the foul pole. Big, strapping first baseman Ryan Strieby followed with a long home run to right center, then Tallet toughened and whiffed two straight to close the frame.
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Johnny Damon, shown here at pregame batting practice, delivered an rbi single that may have been one of the softest-hit balls of a loud game, but the veteran delivered as we all know we can.
Given our interest, the second inning was even better, as Ajax followed a two-out Adam Everett single by working a seven-pitch walk, and Johnny D. delivered a patented just-enough short bloop base hit to right center to score a run. It thrilled us even more than the Tigers fans because Vernon Wells more than answered that tally with a two-run home run in the bottom half. That made it 8-4 with five home runs in two innings. Detroit catcher Gerald Laird, brother of young Yankee third baseman Brandon Laird, would homer in the fourth (sixth bomb of the day) to close it to 8-5, and that is how it would end five innings later.
Nate Robertson pitched well for Detroit, and Scott Downs, Shawn Camp, and a young righthander named Josh Roenicke looked good for the Jays. The ex-Yankee tabulation had Jackson at 1-for-2 with a walk and two runs scored; Damon went 1-for-3 with the one rbi. Jackson made all the plays in center, though he broke in before recovering to snag an Adam Lind drive to the warning track in the second. It’s early, but young Scott Sizemore, looked at as a likely replacement for Placido Polanco at second for Detroit, did not impress.
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The crowd mic beckoned to me let out a few healthy roars all game.
On the same day that the game Monopoly was invented in 1933, the Jays biggie was a rubber chicken toss, although it did come down to a “closest to the box” tiebreaker. The Jays fan beat the Tigers fan. Not a lot of bells and whistles in Dunedin. The impressively lunged Bud guy led the crowd in a no-microphone Take Me Out to the Ballgame at the seventh-inning stretch. But he made the biggest hit of the day much earlier with his signature plea to the crowd: “If you can’t catch a ball,
Catch a buzz!”